Bihar police arrested seven Naxalites

Nawada (Bihar), Feb 23, (ANI): Police in Bihars Nawada District have arrested at least seven suspected naxalites and seized a truck laden with explosives. Superintendent of Police Vinod Kumar said the truck was intercepted near Makhor village, which falls under the Akbarpur Police Stations jurisdiction. Around 8,640 detonators, 6,000-kg gelatin wire, 10-kg fuse wire and three sets of cell phones were recovered. A Maruti van was also seized along with the truck, Kumar said. The seized truck was coming from Guna in Madhya Pradesh and the explosives were to be delivered to the naxalite infested areas of Sheikhpura, Jamui, Lakhisarai and Munger, he added. The arrested are being interrogated. The Year 2007 witnessed a rise in overall fatalities in Left Wing Eextemism (LWE)-related incidents in Bihar. According to provisional data, 49 fatalities were recorded in 2007, as compared to 51 fatalities in 2006. Whereas fatalities among the Maoist ranks remained at comparable low levels, there was a sharp dip in civilian fatalities (down from 40 to 23), with a corresponding and alarming rise in security forces (SF) ranks, registering more than a four-fold increase at 21, up from five in 2006. The dominance of the Maoists in the State was demonstrated in the proliferation of swarming attacks coordinated assaults by large numbers of Maoist cadres and peoples militia, principally on Police and SF posts, camps and establishments. Of the 42 swarming attacks conducted by the Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist) through out the country in 2007, 12 took place in Bihar alone. Significantly, there were just nine swarming attacks by the Maoists across the country, in 2006, of which only one was located in Bihar. Interestingly, at the beginning 2007, Bihar was being projected as a success story. The State witnessed a decline in LWE-related activities from an alarming 323 incidents in 2004 to 186 in 2005 and to a further 107 in 2006. The Maoist dominance is well documented and officially confirmed. According to a March 2007 Bihar Police document, 30 of the States 38 Districts are currently affected by Maoist activities. Nine of these have been designated ‘hyper-sensitive’. A further nine Districts fall into the ’sensitive’ category, while the remaining 12 Districts are categorised ‘less sensitive’. According to the Institute for Conflict Managements database, Maoist activities though not necessarily Maoist violence in 2006 and 2007 (till December 20), was reported from 32 Districts. While Maoist influence has been most visible over the southern and central Districts, the northern Districts, sharing border with Nepal, have also been witnessing increasing mobilisation as well as the actual orchestration of attacks, indicating a comprehensive expansion of the Maoist strength across the States geographical spread. Bihar remains a critical centre for the Maoist strategic outreach. In spite of significant arrests, the at least 2,500 strong cadre of the CPI-Maoist has found it easy to retain its strongholds in the State. (ANI)